BUDGET PARES STUDENT AID See Editorial Page CY C 5k 19iaui &utll UP AND UP High-38 Low-29 See Today for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 117 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 20, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages r r r s IF~YOU SEE NEWS HAPPEN CALL76-DN1 Y Kissinger - Eastern l ders confer Energy crises over? It now looks as though the Great Energy Crisis of 1973 is over -at least as far as the University is concerned. According to Jack Weidenbach, University director of physical properties and plant extension, Michigan Consolidated Gas Company will resume gas delivery around Feb. 25 "unless something unforeseen happens." The University has been operating solely on reserves since delivery was cutoff Jan. 14 Prof in car crash Katherine Organski, local political scientist and journalist was killed in an auto crash last week and her husband-well known political science Prof. A. F. K. Organski-was seriously injured. Organski is at present in St. Joseph Hospital in Guelph, Ontario. News of the accident, which happened last Thursday, was withheld until yesterday so that next of kin could be notified. Mini-courses approved Eight of the University's one credit, pass/fail mini-courses have been approved for offering this winter. Classes are offered on topics ranging from "Iran and Non-Iran: the Plateau and its Borders" to "Natural and Synthetic Oxides" and everything in between. Check it out-a complete list and more information can be had from the Angell Hall counseling offices or by dialing Point 1 (763-0390). Happenings .. . . . . are largely geared to the academically inclined . most tittilating lecture of the day will be by Cleve Backster, the man who talks to plants. Backster will enlighten you about your vegetable friends at Hill Aud, at 3 p.m. and at Rackham Aud. at 4 p.m. . . . Natural Resources students can have "Doughnuts with the Dean" from 10:30-11:30 a.m., 2030 School of Natural Resources . . . at noon catch a 50 cent lunch at the International Center courtesy of the Ecumenical Campus Center . . . from 6 p.m. until -10 p.m. you can attend the UAC "1973 Creative Arts Festival" at the Nat Sci Aud-it's free . . . at 3 p.m. political science is featured at the LSA Coffee Hour,.6602 Haven . . . and 'U' Folk Dancers will sponsor a Rumanian Dance workshop in the Women's Old Athletic Bldg. on Forest from 7:30 until 10:00 p.m.-$1.50 admission ... have fun Back to normal? The POWs never come back the same. Richard Springman, who recently returned from a Viet Cong prison camp wearing beads and a peace symbol has been dubbed by the Army as displaying "classic prisoner of war withdrawal symptoms." Springman was taken to Letterman Hospital in Cottonwood, Ariz. for treatment of ,'periods of disorientation, mood changes and withdrawal." But all is not lost. According to an Army spokesman, Springman has shown "marked improvement in the past 48 hours." Hold the mushrooms! The Food and Drug Administration yesterday announced the nation's first pizza recall. The offending pizzas, frozen pies made by the Fabbrini Family Foods of Ossineke, Mich., may contain mushrooms contaminated with deadly botulism toxin. The com- pany obtained the tainted mushrooms from the United Canning Co. of East Plaestine, Ohio. British preppies British preppies at crusty Eton College are in revolt. It seems their profs, absent-minded old men, forget to dismiss classes on time. The student's battle plan to keep the profs on their toes includes shuffling their feet, refusing to answer ques- tions, and if all else fails turning over chairs. Sounds like they're just picking up on some of our old tricks. On the inside .,.. . . . Associate Arts Editor Diane Levick writes about John Denver and his recent concert here . . . the mysterious and generally cosmic Sylvia begins her horoscope "Sylvia's Signs" on the Editorial Page . . . and sports writer Marc Feldman previews the upcoming NCAA tournament on the Sports Page. The weather picture Another gloomy, gray February day is in store for us today. It will be mostly cloudy with a chance of snow this morning. High sometime this afternoon will be in the 30s and it will be cloudy and cold (around 20) tonight. Winds will be from the northwest at 10-15 m.p.h. Bah! China talks end By JAMES PRINGLE Reuters Staff Writer PEKING-Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-Lai yester- day described his talks here with President Nixon's spe- cial envoy, Henry Kissinger as "very good." The Premier made the comment less than 12 hours after Kissinger's departure for Tokyo following a four- day visit to Peking. Chou and other Chinese leaders looked buoyant and con- fident as they attended a banquet last night at the Great Hall of the People for Begum Bhutto, wife of Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who is on a visit here. Asked by a correspondent how the talks with Kissinger had gone, Chou said "very good." Although Chou and the Chinese leadership have re- mained tight-lipped about the talks, diplomats here are confident that they will lead to some form of American diplomatic representation in Peking this year. Kissinger's nearly 20 hours of talks here were crowned with a two-hour meeting with Chairman Mao Tse-Tung. Western diplomats here said they believed that the meet- ing with Chairman Mao must herald a new era in rela- tions between China and the United States. Diplomats here said the breakthrough in relations soon might involve a U.S. commitment to reduce troops in See KISSINGER, Page 10 Shoichet Reports to Tokyo By KENSEI YOSHIDA Associated Press Writer TOKYO - Henry Kissinger filled in Japan's leaders yesterday on his talks in Hanoi and Peking, dined at a geisha house and headed for hometo report. The talks between President Nixon's foreign affairs advisor and Japanese leaders reportedly centered on Kis- singer's Saturday meeting with Chairman Mao- Tse- Tung. Nothing was made public on the subject but Herb Klein, White House director of communication, indicated an an- nouncement would be made on Kissinger's arrival in Washington at 3:30 today. Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ohira, who joined Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka for an hour and 40 minutes of talks with Kissinger, said the Japanese received the gist of the talks with Mao. But Ohira said he had been asked not to make any disclosure. Ohira told newsmen that the talks covered a wide spec- trum of subjects, including Vietnam reconstruction, the international monetary situation and China's relations with the United States and Japan. Sources close to the American delegation said there had been an important advance against speculation that it involved anything so major as the establishment of See KISSINGER, Page 7 Kissinger confers with Tanaka in Tokyo edges Sinclair in Ward HRP raice; Kaimowit 'Viet war rage s d espite appealis By The AP and Reuters SAIGON - South Vietnamese troops and communist forces yester- day stepped up their battle for control of disputed territory, despite appeals from international ceasefire supervisors for a halt to the hostilities. Ambassador Michael Gauvin of Canada, chairman of the Interna- tional Commission of Control and Supervision, said the cease-fire failure as well as the delay of the central Joint Military Commission in becoming fully operative, has presented the ICCS with "serious prob- lems in meeting its obligations." The Saigon command claimed that cease-fire violations have soared past the 4,000 mark and alleged these total Vietnamese casualties since the cease-fire officially went into effect on Jan. 28: North Vietnamese and Viet Cong - 7,186 killed, 195 captured; South Vietnamese military - 1,259 killed, 5,837 wounded, 922 miss- ing; Civilian - 103 killed, 373 wounded, 497 abducted. Gauvin said the commission will begin deploying cease-fire teams to 14 of 26 sites tomorrow. The deployment is expected to be com- pleted before the Feb. 26 deadline stipulated in the Paris agreement. Maj Gen. Duncan McAlpine, Canadian chairman of the com- mission's military committee, said safety was the paramount con- sideration in selecting only 14 sites at present. "It goes without saying that we would not want to go to places like Quang Tri and Gio Linh," said McAlpine. "These places are still very much in a state of contestation. Obviously, also we've got to be very careful about how we approach the western delta." Quang Tri and Gio Linh are just below the demilitarized zone, an area of South Vietnam where the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have held considerable territory since they occupied most of the province in an offensive last spring. Gauvin reported that the International Commission of Control and Supervision also decided to send a team into the field today to investi- gate, at the request of the United States, the shooting down of an un- arned American helicopter on a peacekeeping mission last Friday near An Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon. Five crewmen were wounded, one critically, and the United States blamed the Viet Cong. The commission is made up of representatives of Poland, Hun- gary, Indonesia and Canada. A temporary Joint Military Commission, designed to support the peacekeeping body in policing the cease-fire, is composed of delegations from the United States, North and South Vietnam and the Viet Cong. It is supposed to operate on the basis of inanimity but has been slowed by bickering. The peace agreement provides for 825 personnel on each delegation of the Joint Military Commission. The United States and North andj See FIGHTING, Page 7 ---- - -- -- -- - - - t Second z victor No upsets in small turnout In the closest race of an otherwise uneventful, low-turnout primary election yesterday, Frank Shoichet was selected by Second Ward voters to run as the Human Rights Party candidate for City Council in the April 2 general elections. Shoichet turned back a serious challenge from R nbow Peoples Party member David Sinclair, who had mounted an extensive campaign. Shoichet received 436 votes to Sinclair's 344, while candidates Lisa North and Alexander Stephenson received 128 and 21 votes respectively. "I think we won through dogged persistency," said Shoichet last night. "We just kept doing what we set out to do, talking with a lot of people on a one to one basis." Sinclair had no comment on his defeat, though he congratulated Shoichet at the winner's victory party. RPP is expected to support Shoichet in April. Bea Kaimowitz won the HRP mayoral primary with 1173 votes defeating Ann Bobroff, 471, Richard Steinhart, 209, and David Allen with 92. Kaimowitz had been favored by most observers. Democratic mayoral hopeful Franz Mogdis easily beat opponents Robert Elton and John Feiner while Republican James Stephenson swamped Louis Ernst, 4,862 to 419. There were two other city council primary races decided yesterday. In the third ward, Re- publican party favorite Robert Henry defeated challenger Roger Bertoia 1,254 to 664, while Democrats in the Fourth Ward chose Ethel Lewis over Carl Hollie, 706 to 194. Lewis had been expected to win in that ward. The low turnout probably helped Shoichet, who ran a well organized campaign. Sinclair, the brother of John Sin- clair, probably had greater name identification with voters, and con- ducted a high powered campaign. But results indicate that the masses of dorm students at whom he aimed much of his appeal turned out in small numbers. Shoichet's organ- osed conduct ization was able to marshal party d to the As- regulars, to turn the tide in his ept. Chairman favor. former chair- The low turnout also made it bly, and Law difficult to assess how the winners rt. of yesterday's balloting will do in mingly passed April. For example, in the First f 42-3. Ward, traditionally a Democratic I supplant the bastion, Republican David Wiarda duct code im- was able to garner almost 500 s at the time votes, leaving him only 50 votes Movement in behind popular Democratic incum- the height of bent Norris Thomas. Thomas is at the Univer- expected to win easily in April. the Regents Voter turnout was 20 per cent. late a new set The following people contribut- ed to the Daily's election cover- ed its first set age: David Burhenn, Gordon of 1971, which Atcheson, Terry Martin, and Ann , Page 7 Rauma. Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK SECOND WARD HRP primary candidates Frank Shoichet and David Sinclair pass out literature convincing passers-by that each is best in yesterday's city primary. Shoichet edged Sinclair by a narrow mar gin. CONDUCT CODE PASSED: Faculty vetoes racial v Business }pieks new leaders The new Senior Business Mana- gers of The Daily officially took office yesterday to serve for the next 12 months. Appointed two weeks ago by the outgoing seniors, the group if six s will control The Daily's advertising and circulation functions as well as the budget and all expendi- tures. Heading. the group is Business Manager Bill Blackford, a Resi- dential College junior from Los Angeles concentrating in political eri~~~nrP~ Pwilirrth nrp By SUE SOMMER The faculty yesterday narrowly voted to oppose voluntary racial identifications on University job ap- plications, on the grounds that such information might be "misused." Yesterday's meeting of Senate Assembly, the faculty representa- tive body, also approved a pro- posed new set of conduct rules for the University community-leaving approval by the Regents as the sole obstacle to the rules' imple- mentation. The "misuse" of the racial iden- tifi nt't" f1 dnvAl b tha nn Members of the troubled, however,< term consequencest fication. A repres Civil Liberties Bo group, reported the ious reservations" worrying that th might be misusedd inal intentions. The faculty also possibility of a raci form presented sepa actual job applicati unenthusiastic, how Assembly were Regents, the prop about the long- rules were presente of racial identi- sembly by History D entative of the Gerhard Weinberg,f ard, a faculty man of the Assemb Board's "ser- Professor Robert Bu about the plan, Assembly overwhel ze information the rules by a vote o despite its orig- The new rules wil Interim Rules, a con discussed the posed by the Regent al identification of the Black Action arately from the the spring of 1970- ron. Varner was student protest here 'ever, maintain- sity. At that time, wour, miregardcreated UC to formu would disregard of conduct rules. The council propos the University' of rules in February e request of the See FACULTY i ing that nnnlicants i titcaton earea n te Dan's OD u it dplaiL caUZ~it Kin l Uy p llcPCI P- ponents involves discrimination against or in favor of minorities. The motion to oppose racial ID, which is only advisory, passed by a margin of 21-18 and now goes to the Regents who will make the final decision. Affirmative Action Director Nel- lie Varner presented the case for racial identification on job appli- cations to the Assembly. She claim- ed that the primary purpose of such identification would be to help' evaluate how efficiently the Univer- sity is meeting government require-' ments for minority employment. a separate form. Drawn up by1 Council (UC) at th Porpoise, £IQ WASHINGTON (P) - For those that thought the nuclear submarine was the ultimate in undersea weapons, look again. According to CBS, the Navy has trained dolphins to plant and retrieve intelligence devices, attack enemy devices and place explosives. However, the head of the sea mammal program, Harris Stone, special assistant for intelligence of the Bureau of Naval operations, said there was no truth to reports of a "kamikaze porpoise" trained to carry explosives and blow up submarines. CBS Newsman Morley Safer said on the "60 minutes" .fi r:r ...: _. .::.:.:::.:.:::.....:. : .... ... ? v :. . ...:.... ..n ...t ........................ ......_........... ......... r... c .....